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Dynasty

The Rise and Fall of the House of Caesar

ebook
1 of 3 copies available
1 of 3 copies available
Author and historian Tom Holland, co-host of the hit podcast THE REST IS HISTORY, returns to his roots in Roman history and the audience he cultivated with Rubicon—his masterful, witty, brilliantly researched popular history of the fall of the Roman republic—with Dynasty, a luridly fascinating history of the reign of the first five Roman emperors.

Dynasty continues Rubicon's story, opening where that book ended: with the murder of Julius Caesar. This is the period of the first and perhaps greatest Roman Emperors and it's a colorful story of rule and ruination, running from the rise of Augustus through to the death of Nero. Holland's expansive history also has distinct shades of I Claudius, with five wonderfully vivid (and in three cases, thoroughly depraved) Emperors—Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, and Nero—featured, along with numerous fascinating secondary characters. Intrigue, murder, naked ambition and treachery, greed, gluttony, lust, incest, pageantry, decadence—the tale of these five Caesars continues to cast a mesmerizing spell across the millennia.
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    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2015
      A decade after his award-winning life of Julius Caesar (Rubicon, 2004), veteran historian Holland (In the Shadow of the Sword: The Birth of Islam and the Rise of the Global Arab Empire, 2012, etc.) delivers biographies of five descendants who ruled after his death. This is well-trod ground for good reason: this period saw the foundation of the Roman Empire, whose emperors, after a prosperous start, revealed a distressing if entertaining tendency to self-indulgence, paranoia, and murder. Following Caesar's assassination in 44 B.C.E., his adopted son, Octavius, won a brutal civil war to assume power. Octavius restored the facade of the old republic while a compliant Senate granted him vast authority. As Augustus, he ruled efficiently and was widely mourned upon his death in 14 C.E., having expanded the empire and begun the 200-year "pax Romana." Several promising successors died during his long reign, and Rome was left with the sullen, reclusive Tiberius, who retired to Capri after a few years, leaving ruling to underlings and living a life of (according to later chroniclers) debauchery. The short, stormy reign of Caligula ended with him as the first emperor murdered by the Praetorian Guard, who crowned his successor, Claudius. Modern scholars have a fairly high opinion of Claudius and even of his adopted son, Nero, although the dynasty ended with widespread revolt and his suicide in 68 C.E. Holland makes liberal use of unreliable but lurid Roman sources, including Tacitus, Suetonius, Dio, and others, but he has done his homework and acknowledges modern scholars who take these with a grain of salt. The author also includes a timeline, a dramatis personae, and a family tree for the Julians and Claudians. A vivid account of five Roman emperors, emphasizing their vices and vicious behavior with less attention to the vast empire, which continued to prosper despite them.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2015

      The dynasty in question is the Julio-Claudian (27 BC-68 AD), which forms a dramatic subject for Holland's follow-up to his best-selling Rubicon: The Last Years of the Roman Republic. Beginning with a short return to the theme of that book with the fighting between Pompey and Caesar, the action picks up with the origin story of Augustus's wife, Livia Drusilla (also known as Julia Augusta), which is appropriate given her crucial role in forming the dynasty. Augustus and Livia make up the first section as the Padrone, in a term borrowed from the Sicilian Mafia. The next section carries on the theme as "Cosa Nostra," with chapters roughly corresponding to the reigns of Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, and Nero. That Holland is also a novelist is clear from his epic scope and focus on moments of tension, which are plentiful with this set of leaders, whom Holland does a lovely job of humanizing while still presenting an accurate historical portrait, somewhat along the lines of Robert Graves's I Claudius but staying within what is evident from the historical record. VERDICT While fans of Roman history will certainly want to read this account, it's tone will also appeal to lovers of historical fiction.--Margaret Heller, Loyola Univ. Chicago Libs.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2015

      A member of the British Commission for Military History, Holland authored 2013's Dam Busters: The True Story of the Inventors and Airmen Who Led the Devastating Raid To Smash the German Dams in 1943, which has been optioned by filmmaker Peter Jackson. Here Holland offers the first of three revisionist volumes on World War II, arguing that Germany did not have the world's best army in 1939 and that Britain was not washed-up and awaiting America's rescue.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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